My Samsung Gear Fit is trying to reboot but keeps failing. It appears to keep recycling and retrying to reboot.... just can't do it. I called their customer service number and got NO WHERE. I've not dropped or damaged my device in any way and its less that 90 days old so I don't believe its the battery. Serious concerns - service tech was not helpful and in closing was told that someone else will call me within 48 hours :-( Not at all happy here today!

I am having similar issues as well. After wanting an activity tracket for around 2 years I finally decided to take the plunge and buy one. I was looking at the fitbit chargehr and charge 2 but decided to go with the gearfit 2 as I had heard it was better than the fitbit and also had phone notification connection and touchscreen. I absolutely LOVE the look of this watch and the comfort is out of this world. I aactually forget I have it on. I have had this almost 4 weeks and am now having issues. It freezes up or shuts off and won't restart up unless I put it on the charger for a long period of time. I charge it at night so I know it is not happening due to a low or dead battery. I have not worn this in the rain or shower as I never trust that any device is actually water proof or resistant. I also did not purchase a warranty because I am very careful with any device I own. I was super excited for this watch and to have an extra push towards a more fit life yet I am now finding myself disappointed and less motivated that I was previously. After spending $180 US I expected a better, more functional and less buggy device. I feel I should have gone with the fitbit as a lot of those I know own and love theirs and have no problems whatsoever.

I have a Gear Fit which is unresponsive. When I do get it to "power" up I get a dimly lit screen with four white vertical bars and five black/grey vertical bars. I inadvertently had it on when I was swimming, maybe 15 minutes, but did not go underwater with it. I believe the specs say it is safe in 5 meters of water for thirty minutes. Any idea of whether or not this is fixable? Thanks.

Mine was updating and my husband's phone died! Since it didn't finish the update, nothing will come on. I have tried charging it (even thou it had 75% battery when we did the update) and still nothing. I have tried EVERYTHING! I even pushed and held the button for a while and still nothing. Did we kill it when we interrupted the update?! Someone please help! I really don't want to fight with Sprint trying to replace it!

I have tried update my fit (android 2.2.1 froyo) to new version but in finale process it freezed on samsung logo ,after that i had tried to fix in by (Odin tool) but now in download mod not plug to Odin

My fit gear is just saying that it is rebooting. I was wearing it and it keeps trying to reboot. Is there a way to reset or what should I do. It is fully charged. I only had it for less than two months.

Mine is saying this too. It's stuck in reboot. I tried all the tips and when it gets to the download continue screen it won't go any further. I'm super !#^&@@ as I chose this over fitbit and now I'm out money and the device. Even more irritating is the fact that it wont reboot or shut off and keeps making vibrating noise thats super annoying. Im begining to really not like samsung and it's all I've chosen for over 11 years for phone, tv, and other devices. I'm really not happy

Just so everybody knows. The problem remains. I bought my Gear Fit 2 in March. Suddenly, it just went dead. I recharged it once. or twice but It would not hold much charge. Then, nothing more. I really had enough of Samsung. Rob Machado.

26 Answers

I too had this situation where my Gear Fit appeared to be 'Dead' even after charging for 24 hours, I noticed however that my Phone still had the Gear Fit Icon showing.

I disconnected the Bluetooth and reconnected and noticed it connected fine so I held the power button down on gear fit for around 5 seconds (maybe longer) and it appeared to perform a 'Soft Reset' and started up fine.

I had the same issue, I just turned off my Android phone blue tooth, went to Gear fit and held the power button for 10seconds and it finally turned on and had a message to connect, I went to the Fit software on my Android and I was prompted to turn on Bluetooth, once I did turn on blue tooth via the Gear Fit program the Gear Fit screen had a check mark I was prompted to push and so far everything is working.

this happened to me just today. my gear fit is not turning on. not charging. totally dead! i panicked. luckily, i have a very patient partner and adviced me to leave it for a few hours to charge. after 6 hours, i pressed the power button for 10 seconds the voila! i came to life. horray! i hope this comment will help others with this problem.- charlotte, auckland, nz

I had the problem where my gear fit would not turn on no matter how many times I pressed the button so I held down the power button for about 6 to 8 second and it buzzed 2 or 3 times then it just rebooted and worked once more

Thanks - this worked for me. I have no idea what happened. Threw it on the charger at night at 5% and woke up to a dark gear fit. When it finally turned on - it showed 78% so I let it fully charge and I think I'm back in business. Still leaves me wondering what happened though.

Thanks for the help, folks. My Gear Fit absolutely refused to charge last night, no matter what I did (different charge cradles, different cords, left it plugged in all night)... but after it was plugged in all night, I reset it (15 sec hold) and then reconnected the bluetooth on my Note4 and now all is well... I think LOL.

Thank you so much. I use my Fit for everything and wasn't looking forward to having to buy a new one, as this one's just out of warranty!

I THOUGHT my gearfit was fully charged (had just been plugged in recently) but wouldn't turn on. Read this string so turned bluetooth off on phone and held down the button on the gearfit for 10-15 seconds....and it rebooted (screen said so). Of course, the charge on it was 0! So glad I found this information. I LOVE my gearfit!!

When my Fit2 was taken off of the charger, it was turned off. I tried turning it on without success. Then, I looked at a pic of the unit and determined I was pressing the wrong button. It should be the smaller one. I pressed that for several seconds, the unit rebooted and works fine. Maybe my stupidity will help some reboot their Fit2.

I had same issue. Turned off Bluetooth on my phone, then held down both buttons at the same time on the Gear Fit 2 for a few seconds. It suddenly vibrated and started working again. Hopefully this is the end of the problem.

Mine has a black screen, but when on the charger, indicates 100% charged. I tried holding the power button down for a long time, with no result. Then I tried pressing BOTH buttons, and immediately, it came on.

I try all hold buttons put change it vibrates and still gets notifications from the phone but no screen and I didn't do anything apart from put it on charge only overnight. This is only two months old and they're not dropped it and looked after it very well it was on 8% battery life so I put on change when bed I noticed the charging screen was on when I woke up. So I going let battery die completely then I'll put it back on charge. but pressing the buttons does not do anything even resetting it from the phone does not do anything but when I get a text message it still vibrate

Please make sure you're holding, not just pressing, the power button for at least 3 seconds. Simply pressing the button quickly does not boot your device.

If this fails it may be due to battery failure. This may be the case if you have dropped/possibly damaged your Gear Fit recently. The battery may also simply have expended all of it's charge permanently. The estimated lifetime of the battery used in the Gear Fit (210mAh according to Gizmodo) is 1000+ "cycles" which is one complete drain from 100% to 0%. This translates to roughly two years for the average user. Extensive use (especially while simultaneously charging) can reduce this and cause early battery death. Either of these causes will require battery replacement which is covered here*. If you need further assistance, please do not hesitate to ask.

My Power Button doesn't seem to be working. The fit works fine, but when I press the power button nothing happens and when I hold it down it won't shut off or restart. I just got it last month as a Christmas gift.

I had the same problem. I had 80% battery and the screen turned off. If I held the power button down it would vibrate but that was it. I cleaned the charging points, turned off Bluetooth on my phone. Connected the charger and was able to get it to turn on again. Turned Bluetooth back on my phone and it fixed itself. Weird

Just had the exact same thing happen to my gear fit watch. I tried everthing to start it but nothing worked until I pressed the on button for at least 10 seconds. It then vibrated and began the charging cycle!

2. Screen responds to touch(!) - when i unpair the device and pair it again, when i press the left(top) part of the screen (confirmation button) it stops vibrating...

3. I am able to turn it off and on but the screen is still black (Samsung logo does not appear)

4. Bluetooth works fine

5. Kies3 also recognizes the device

6. It happened randomly a few times - the screen turned on and was responsive to touch but when i try to do anything it freezes and goes black again. I noticed that I can even change the wallpaper and clock through the Gear Fit Manager. I thought that it could be just the screen issue but I've never dropped it and as I mentioned - it responds to touch.

This problem appeared out of nowhere - I've left the watch (turned off) for a month on my desk, the battery was at 40% today, tried to turn it on and...

Thank you for all good advice taken, mine has been in complete darkness most of the day but when I connected the charger it didn't seem to be doing anything. A lot of patience does go along way cos hey presto it's back on! Thank you everyone

I just experienced the same issue. My Gear Fit just disconnected and went black. Holding the button down would make the device vibrate, but the screen remained black. Just charged the device yesterday and should have over 50% battery life left. These devices are, in my opinion, too new to be experiencing battery failure.

I put mine on the charging cradle for grins, but still no response. Interestingly, and this may be a completely random coincidence, I checked my phone (Galaxy S4 Actove) for a software update and my Gear Fit came back online. Lost my step count for the day, but my exercise history was still on the device. I can't for the life of me think of a reason why or how the phone could keep the device from turning on, so again...this was likely a coincidence.

I experienced the same problem as you all did. It turned out that the charging point on my gear fit was a bit dirty. Try to clean it up even if it looks okay. If that doesn't work, try to clean the charging adapter too. It worked for me and I hope it works for y'all folks too. Cheers..

Just had the same issues. Just randomly turned off and wouldn't turn back on again. Tried the reset thing and it vibrated a few times then showed 0% battery even though I know it was fully charged. Got it back on charge currently so fingers crossed. At least its turned back on.

Well, I was told by a computer geek that when he cannot get a response from a computer hard drive or some other device that has an internal battery, he puts it in a bag, in the freezer, he claims you let it cool a couple hours then when you take it out, you don't have long before it warms up, so put the charger back on or try and turn it on. Maybe it will help, beats replacing and its cheap. P.S. If that works and you have to repeat it, likely you have a connection issue internal to the Fit and cooling contracts components or internal components have a thermal issue. Good luck

Well, couldn't find a new Gear Fit, so, got a refurbished one. That was only 2 weeks ago and already it won't work. Have to take it back tomorrow. Geek Squad won't guarantee the ones THEY work on. lol Glad I didn't waste $100.00 and it last 6 weeks. I have had a lot of trouble with the apps too. Won't work with my Samsung Galaxy Tab 3. I got the Gear Fit just for that reason! When I downloaded the Manager it said "For security reasons, your device is currently set to block installation of applications not obtained from Play Store. To change this. go to Settings > Security > Unknown sources." Where else would I have gotten the app?? lol Anyway, it won't charge. The charger just vibrates. We will see I guess.

Thanks for this. Mine wouldn't respond to the button for turning the screen on/off or turning the device on/off. I turned off BT at the Gear Fit several times and did a reset from the settings function several times. Nothing seemed to work and it was down to 1% battery.

I found this forum, turned off BT at the phone and the Fit immediately started charging; all functionality returned as well. Turned BT back on at the phone and everything is fine and working properly!

MY fit has gone completely dead three times so far. Each time, it takes 2 to 3 days to recoup, and then out of the clear blue, it begins to work again after hanging on to the charge line. I can't depend on this gizmo to work for me when I really need it. I'm forced to do a return, sadly.

Thanks for the help, folks. My Gear Fit absolutely refused to charge last night, no matter what I did (different charge cradles, different cords, left it plugged in all night)... but after it was plugged in all night and reset it (15 sec hold), I reconnected the bluetooth on my Note4 and now all is well... I think LOL.

I had been trying to figure out a good way to clean the contacts. I never thought about a pencil eraser. I was just wetting it a little and that had helped before but the corrosion has been getting worse. The eraser helped a lot!

Thank you so much. I use my Fit for everything and wasn't looking forward to having to buy a new one, as this one's just out of warranty!

I was having a problem with mine last night. All of the sudden the battery dropped to 2% so I plugged it in for the night only to find out after I got to work that it didn't charge. I got home and put it back on and it still didn't seem to do anything even after cleaning the contacts and all. So I finally grabbed a separate phone cord and plugged it into my computer and it popped on and started to charge so I don't know if my power cord has gone bad already or if it just needed a jump from another power source to jump start it. But it's something that people may try.

I just took mine out of the box and it was unresponsive. I plugging it into my computer, into the wall socket, cleaning the contacts on the watch and on the dock, holding the power button, holding both buttons, i tried to power it up while it was sitting on the dock....nothing. When I read this, I grabbed a Fast Charge plug from an old phone and attached the USB cord on the dock to that and it fired right up. The battery was at 0% and slowly clicked over to 1%. I'm still holding my breath and I'm glad I purchased the 2 year warranty just in case, but hopefully everything works out. Hope this helps someone.

if your Samsung Gear Fit2 does not power on when power is pressed, or if it does not reboot when holding the power button, place it in the charging dock and press power once while on the charging dock. If that doesn't work, press and hold the power button for more than 10 seconds while on the cbarging dock.

About a week and a half ago I went to sleep and put my gear fit2 in the dock to charge overnight. After the mentioned time, I decided to wear it today and no matter how many times or for how long I held down the power button, it will not power on. When i got home I did the steps included above: I put it on the charging dock or base and pressed the power button (I can't remember if one quick time or for a few seconds) and it lit up with a 0% charge.

I don't understand after 1 and a half weeks of sitting on the charging dock how it would show 0% charge. But right now it's been charging for 10 minutes and it shows 23%.

No clue. Maybe it's a battery saving feature that makes the fit2 stop accepting charge after an extended period sitting on the dock?

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I had the same thing happen to my Gearfit 2 twice now. The first time I followed the instructions below and it fired back up, and I had to perform the Soft Re-start. This time it would not power up no matter how long I depressed the power button.

So I put the Gearfit 2 on its charger and then pressed the power button and held it down. It took about 12-15 seconds and then came to life.

The interesting thing thing is, I always power mine down when charging. When I powered it down it still had 42% battery life. Now it is totally dead. What happened to the charge it had?

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Stay in the loop

Speak out for your right to repair.

New York,

New Yorkers stand up for what they believe in. And we're asking you to
stand up for repair.

This year, New York could be the first state in the nation to pass the Fair Repair Act,
A8192 and
S618.
We have a chance to guarantee our right to repair electronic
equipment—like smartphones, computers, and even farm equipment. We have a
chance to protect local repair jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that
keep getting squeezed out by manufacturers.

It’s not going to be easy. Manufacturers are standing in the
way. When your stuff breaks, they want to be the only people allowed to fix it.
So far, they’ve managed to stop Fair Repair legislation before your
representatives get a chance to vote on it. We’ve got to be louder than their
lobbyists.

The Fair Repair Act, known as
A8192 and
S618,
requires manufacturers to provide owners
and independent repair businesses with fair access to service information,
security updates, and replacement parts. Tell your state representative to
support S618. Tell them you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for your right to repair.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair.

Massachusetts,

The people of Massachusetts have always stood up for their
right to repair. In 2012, voters passed a law that ensured
residents' right to repair their car wherever they wanted.
Now, it's time to do the same for electronics and other equipment.

With the Digital Right to Repair Act,
H.143
and S.96,
we have a chance to guarantee our right to repair electronics—like
smartphones, computers, and even farm equipment. The Digital Right to
Repair Act requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
information businesses with fair access to service information, security
updates, and replacement parts.

But we need your help. Big manufacturers don't want this
bill passed. And they're working hard to defeat it.

If you think you have a right to repair your products, find out who
represents you in the Massachusetts legislature. Tell them repair is good
for the environment, good for consumers, and good for business. Tell
them you support the Digital Right to Repair Act, S.96 and H.143.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair.

Nebraska,

This year, the people of Nebraska have a chance to guarantee
their right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment,
digital equipment, and even cell phones.

It’s yours. You own it. You shouldn’t have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. The Fair Repair Act, or LB 67,
is simple. It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent
repair businesses with fair access to service information and replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get back on with your
life.

But manufacturers don’t like that idea. When
your tractor breaks or your cell phone stops working, they want to be the
only people who can fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want
for parts and service.

It’s time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair jobs—the
corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed out. Find
out who represents you in the Nebraska state legislature. Tell them you support
the bipartisan Fair Repair Act, LB 67. Tell them that you believe repair
should be fair, affordable, and accessible. Stand up for the right to repair
in Nebraska.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Dear Minnesotans,

Minnesota has a chance to become the first state in the nation to pass
"Fair Repair" legislation. SF 15, or the Fair Repair bill, guarantees our
right to repair digital equipment like computers, refrigerators, cell phones
and tractors. It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent
repair shops with access to repair information and replacement parts—so you
have the resources you need to fix things quickly and affordably.

But we need your help. Manufacturers don’t want a Fair Repair bill. When
your tractor breaks or your cell phone stops working, they want to be the
only people who can fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want.

Find out who represents you in Minnesota's legislatures. Tell them that
you want the right to repair your purchases. Tell them you support a
bipartisan Fair Repair bill, SF 15. Tell them repair is good for the
environment, good for consumers, and good for businesses.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Dear Kansans,

Kansas has a chance to become the first state in the nation to pass
"Fair Repair" legislation. HB 2122, or the Fair Repair Act, guarantees our
right to repair digital equipment like computers, refrigerators, cell phones
and tractors. It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent
repair shops with access to repair information and replacement parts—so you
have the resources you need to fix things quickly and affordably.

But we need your help. Manufacturers don’t want a Fair Repair bill. When
your tractor breaks or your cell phone stops working, they want to be the
only people who can fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want.

Find out who represents you in Kansas' legislature. Tell them that
you want the right to repair your purchases. Tell them you support a
bipartisan bill. Tell them repair is good for farmers, good for consumers, and good for businesses.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Dear Wyomingites,

Wyoming has a chance to become the first state in the nation to pass
"Fair Repair" legislation. HB 199, or the Fair Repair Act, guarantees our
right to repair digital equipment like computers, refrigerators, cell phones
and tractors. It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent
repair shops with access to repair information and replacement parts—so you
have the resources you need to fix things quickly and affordably.

But we need your help. Manufacturers don’t want a Fair Repair bill. When
your tractor breaks or your cell phone stops working, they want to be the
only people who can fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want.

Find out who represents you in Wyoming's legislature. Tell them that
you want the right to repair your purchases. Tell them you support a
bipartisan bill. Tell them repair is good for farmers, good for consumers, and good for businesses.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Dear Washingtonians,

Washington has a chance to become the first state in the nation to pass
"Fair Repair" legislation. The Fair Repair Act guarantees our
right to repair digital equipment like computers, refrigerators, cell phones
and tractors. It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent
repair shops with access to repair information and replacement parts—so you
have the resources you need to fix things quickly and affordably.

But we need your help. Manufacturers don’t want a Fair Repair bill. When
your tractor breaks or your cell phone stops working, they want to be the
only people who can fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want.

Find out who represents you in Washington's legislature. Tell them that
you want the right to repair your purchases. Tell them you support a
bipartisan bill. Tell them repair is good for farmers, good for consumers, and good for businesses.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Tennessee,

This year, the people of Tennessee have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. The Fair Repair Act is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed out.
Find out who represents you in the Tennessee General Assembly. Tell
them you support the Fair Repair Act, SB 888 in the Senate
and HB 1382 in the
House. Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in Tennessee.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Illinois,

This year, the people of Illinois have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. The Digital Fair Repair Act is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the Illinois General Assembly. Tell
them you support the Digital Fair Repair Act, HB3030.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in Illinois.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Iowa,

This year, the people of Iowa have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. Iowa's Right to Repair Act, HF556, is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers like John Deere and Apple don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the Iowa legislature. Tell
them you support the Right to Repair Act, HF556.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in Iowa.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

North Carolina,

This year, the people of North Carolina have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. North Carolina's Fair Repair Act, H. 663, is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers like John Deere and Apple don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the North Carolina legislature. Tell
them you support the Fair Repair Act, H. 663.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in North Carolina.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

Missouri,

This year, the people of Missouri have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. Missouri's Fair Repair Act, HB1178, is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers like John Deere and Apple don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the Missouri legislature. Tell
them you support the Fair Repair Act, HB1178.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in Missouri.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

New Hampshire,

This year, the people of New Hampshire have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. New Hampshire's upcoming Right to Repair Act is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers like John Deere and Apple don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the New Hampshire legislature. Tell
them you support the Right to Repair Act.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in New Hampshire.

It's time to speak out for your right to repair

New Jersey,

This year, the people of New Jersey have a chance to guarantee their
right to repair their equipment—like tractors, farm equipment, digital
equipment, and even cell phones.

It's yours. You own it. You shouldn't have to beg the manufacturer
for permission to fix it when it breaks. New Jersey's upcoming Fair Repair Act, A4934 is simple.
It requires manufacturers to provide owners and independent repair
businesses with fair access to service information and affordable replacement
parts. So you can fix the stuff you own quickly—and get on with your life.

But manufacturers like John Deere and Apple don't like that idea. When your tractor breaks or
your cell phone stops working, they want to be the only people who can
fix it. And they get to set whatever prices they want for parts and
service.

It's time to fight for your right to repair and defend local repair
jobs—the corner mom-and-pop repair shops that keep getting squeezed
out. Find out who represents you in the New Jersey legislature. Tell
them you support the Fair Repair Act, A4934.
Tell them that you believe repair should be fair, affordable, and
accessible. Stand up for the right to repair in New Jersey.